|
Well, we all know that one of the biggest lacks of The Gimp
is that it misses a good number of plugins. Photoshop is the one
software that everyone loves and use when they have to apply any sort
of mutation / transformation to its images, or when it has to create
oustanding new graphics with the help of well projected plugins. For
photoshop there are hundreds of plugins around.
Is this a problem for the Gimp then? Not at all. Many of you may not
know it but The Gimp supports a large number of photoshop plugins, both
in the Windows version and in the Linux version, thanks to this
wonderful tool called PSPI. Now let’s see how to use it and what we can do with our new toy. Paying nothing, of course….
Getting Started
First we’ll have to install Wine on our Linux box (In Ubuntu you can look for Wine in synaptic), then we’ll need The Gimp, of course and PSPI. In THIS
page you’ll find the Binary version for your system. We’ll see
instruction for Linux only, and I’ll give you generic instructions,
working on any Linux platform.
We’ll also need at least one Photoshop plugin! To get started and
write down this guide I downloaded two plugins, one commercial and one
freeware. The first one is from the very interesting company Faming Pear, I downloaded Designer Sextet from they’re download site. As for the second plugin, the freeware one, I’ve chosen Caravaggio from Xero Graphics.
Installing PSPI and photoshop plugins
Now it is time to install PSPI on your Gimp. The following is an extract from the PSPI site:
The Linux packages include three files:
- README.linux
- pspi, a small shell script
- pspi.exe.so, the binary that wine runs
Copy pspi and pspi.exe.so to your personal GIMP plug-ins folder, typically ~/.gimp-2.2/plug-ins .
When you run GIMP it will issue a warning “wire_read(): error” as
pspi.exe.so can’t be started directly. (The pspi script can, though,
and is from GIMP’s point of view a GIMP plug-in.) This warning is
harmless (GIMP just ignores that file then), but if you want to avoid
it, move pspi.exe.so somewhere else and modify the pspi script to point
to its new location instead.
After starting GIMP, go to the Xtns:Photoshop Plug-in Settings and
enter the folder where you are going to keep the 3rd-party Photoshop
plug-ins (.8bf files) that you want to use in GIMP.
Preferrably you should use an initially empty folder for this, and
then install (copy) Photoshop plug-ins there one by one, verifying that
each works. It isn’t really useful to rush and install a shitload of
Photoshop plug-ins at once and assume they all will work under pspi.
So I did what they wrote in the instructions and also copied my
freshly downloaded PS Plugins to a folder in my home that I called
~/.gimp-2.2/psplugins.
Remember that this gimp folder we are referring to is an hidden
folder, therefore, you’ll have to set your file browser so that it
shows you hidden files. In my case, I use GNOME and Nautilus. I can see
hidden files by using the Nautilus menù View –> Show hidden files.
Setting The Gimp UP
As the guide says, I start The Gimp and it hangs up for some seconds analizyng the newly installed plugin:
But once Gimp is loaded I get no error message as expected (The PSPI
guide suggested that an error may have occurred but I can’t see any).
All works fine for now. Proceeding with the settings, I open the Gimp
Menù Xtns –> Photoshop Plug-in Settings and this window shows up:
Hit the New button (In my screenshot it is the white sheet of paper
with an orange star over it, on the upper left corner of the above
screenshot) and choose the path where you putted your PS Plugins. In my
case we saw that it is /home/darkmaster/.gimp-2.2/psplugins
Push the Ok button and a message will appear waring you that the new plugins will be loaded next time you restart The Gimp.
Testing the new PS Plugins
To complete the operation I close and then open again The Gimp. Even
now I don’t get any error message. Fine! I then load an image from my
HD, click on the filters menù and… hey! Here they are on the bottom of
the menù, my newly installed Photoshop plugins! Great!
Let’s test them! Will they work? I start with Flaming Pear –> Aetherize and… wow it works! Here’s a screenshot!
Now it’s Caravaggio’s turn and wow, it works too! Another screenshot for the press
This is result of applying the Caravaggio filter:
Damn it if this doesn’t look like a real painting ! This Caravaggio plugin kinda rocks and it’s freeware. A well come in my Gimp Universe.
Conclusions
So I tested two random Photoshop plugins from around the net and two
on two of them worked. Guess there’s a very high compatibility thanks
to Wine getting better and better with each release.. What can I say
now? Enjoy and say goodbye to one of the most deprecated defects of The
Gimp, the lack of good and professional plugins! If you’ve got the
money, you can buy and use serious plugins like those from Alien Skin
in Linux with The Gimp and PSPI now !
|